Somalia

2010

Violence has cut through the life of 28-year-old journalist
Abdulahi Ibrahim Dasar, from his high school days in Kismayo, the third-largest
city in Somalia, to his life
as a refugee in South Africa.
The turbulence of Dasar's life also explains his entry into journalism, a
profession that has made him a target of assassination by hard-line Somali militants.

Back in 2001 in Kismayo, Dasar had ambitious plans to become an entrepreneur, but bloodshed from local clan warfare forced his family to seek refuge in South Africa. In the peaceful suburbs of Cape Town, the familiar sound of bullets was gone at last. Very little knowledge of English and difficulty clicking the South African isiXhosa language spoken by the people of the Western Cape did not stop him from venturing into small-scale kiosk work selling groceries.

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In August, Shabelle Media Network, one of Somalia's leading independent broadcasters, did something incredibly brave--they rebroadcast news and music that the BBC's Somali-language service beams to the war-torn Horn of African nation in defiance of a ban imposed by hard-line militant Islamist rebel groups Al-Shabaab and Hizbul Islam. For Somali journalists, who risk death by crossfire and assassination, and censorship from both insurgents and the weak U.S.-backed transitional government, it was a courageous pushback against forces hostile to independent media.

Critical voices in the East African media—whether in Ethiopia, Rwanda, Burundi, or Uganda—have been intimidated, banned, blocked, and beaten prior to elections in recent years. Somalia is so embroiled in conflict that even the concept of having elections remains a faraway dream. But in late June, the semi-autonomous region of Somaliland in northern Somalia managed to hold relatively peaceful and free elections with decent media coverage, local journalists and election observers told CPJ.

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On Tuesday, several journalists were wounded when missiles were fired on a press conference in the battlefield of Somalia's capital, Mogadishu. When the National Union of Somali Journalists broke news of the attack, I immediately checked in with local reporters. I obtained the phone number of photojournalist Ilyas Ahmed Abukar, expecting to speak to a frantic or traumatized man, but to my surprise, Abukar was alert, calm, and willing to share his personal account of what transpired. After a short conversation, he pledged to continue answering my questions via e-mail. Here is some of what he told me.

Last week, I attended an unusual event called the Courage
Forum at which half a dozen speakers, from tightrope artist Philippe Petit and
Sudanese rapper Emmanuel Jal to Virgin founder and chairman Richard
Branson, talked about about overcoming fear.

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Somali journalists Hassan Ali Gesey and Abdihakim Jimale are
roommates these days, living in a tiny, graffiti-ridden room in Nairobi, Kenya.
Neither would have wanted to eke out an existence like this, but dire circumstances
brought them together—starting with the night three years ago that Gesey saved
Jimale’s life.

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“I didn’t wear the bulletproof jacket and helmet that
Reuters gave me,” explained veteran Somali journalist Sahal Abdulle
to a packed crowd at Nairobi’s SerenaHotel
for CPJ’s launch of Attacks on the Press.
“It didn’t seem right when my colleagues, local journalists, were risking their
lives trying to cover the same event.” Abdulle, like all Somali journalists, faces
immense challenges in covering the story in his war-ravaged country. According
to this year’s findings in Attacks, nearly all the
journalists killed in the line of duty in 2009 were local journalists—and nine of
them were killed in Somalia.

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January 21 marks Press Day in Somalia, the most dangerous country in Africa to be a journalist. As such, few local journalists
find much reason to celebrate. With nine Somali journalists killed
in the line of duty last year, numerous local journalists have fled, especially
from the restive capital, Mogadishu.
“The free media is going to die out,”
journalist Mustafa Haji Abdinur warned Ron Hill in an MSNBC interview
last year after he received CPJ’s
2009 International Press Freedom Award.